Location via proxy:   [ UP ]  
[Report a bug]   [Manage cookies]                
Jump to content

John Dent (merchant)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

John Dent
Unofficial Member of the Legislative Council of Hong Kong
In office
26 December 1857 – 8 November 1861
Appointed bySir George Bowen
Preceded byJ. F. Edger
Succeeded byFrancis Chomley
In office
12 May 1866 – 20 June 1867
Preceded byFrancis Chomley
Succeeded byPhineas Ryrie
Chairman of the Shanghai Municipal Council
In office
April 1871 – January 1873
Preceded byGeorge Dixwell
Succeeded byRobert Fearon
Chairman of the Hongkong & Shanghai Banking Corporation
In office
January 1866 – February 1867
Preceded byFrancis Chomley
Succeeded byE. Cunningham
Personal details
Bornc. 1821
Died1892 (aged 71)
OccupationBusinessman
The fountain in front of the old City Hall was built on the donation of John Dent.

John Dent (1821–1892) was a British merchant with the trading firm Dent & Co., a former member of the Legislative Council of Hong Kong and Chairman of the Shanghai Municipal Council.

Biography

[edit]

John was born in 1821 in Madras, India. His uncle Thomas John Dent established Dent & Co. in Canton in the 1820s, while two other uncles Lancelot and Wilkinson Dent became senior partners of the firm,[1] turning it into one of the largest hongs in China and early colonial Hong Kong.

John Dent joined Dent & Co. and became the senior partner of the firm. In 1863, he was elected the third chairman of the Hong Kong General Chamber of Commerce. He played a leading role in the establishment of the Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Company[1] and was one of the proprietors when the bank was incorporated in 1866.[2]

He returned to London in 1864 with a fortune of about £800,000, which he had amassed in China. He helped establish the Blakely Ordnance Company and became its chairman with capital of £120,000.[3]

John Dent was appointed an unofficial Justice of the Peace in 1844. In 1857, he was appointed member of the Legislative Council of Hong Kong.[4] He resigned from the office in 1861 and replaced by Francis Chomley,[5] another partner of Dent & Co.

He was reappointed to the Legislative Council in 1866.[6] He resigned in 1867 after the firm went bankrupt and was replaced by Phineas Ryrie.[7]

Dent was also appointed consul for the Kingdom of Sardinia and later the Kingdom of Italy in Hong Kong from 1858 to 1867.[8][9][10]

Dent & Co. went bankrupt in 1867 during the worldwide financial crisis which originated in 1866 in London. They suffered a loss of no less than £200,000 by the malversations of a Portuguese clerk in their employment at Shanghai who was sentenced to seven years imprisonment.[3] The petition for adjudication of bankruptcy was filed in the Supreme Court of Hong Kong on 29 June 1867.[11] Dent had to remove his headquarters in Shanghai and sold the Dent Building to the Hong Kong Hotel Co.

Dent was known for his opulent lifestyle. He was reported to have spent £10,000 on a racehorse to win the Hong Kong cup.[1] The clock-tower at the end of Pedder Street and the entrance to Queen's Road in Central, Hong Kong, erected by public subscription in 1862, was at his suggestion; its initial design had to be stripped of its original decorative features, owing to the waning enthusiasm of the community.[12] John Dent also donated a fountain at the entrance of the old City Hall.[13]

In 1870, Dent reopened Dent & Co in Shanghai in the premises previously occupied by his old firm.[14] In April 1871, he became the Chairman of the Shanghai Municipal Council and served in that position until January 1873.[15]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c Law, Philip K. (2004). "Dent family (per. c.1820–1927)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/53862. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  2. ^ "Hong Kong Government Reports Online" (PDF). The Hongkong Government Gazette. 25 July 1866.
  3. ^ a b "The English November Mail per Bombay". The Argus. Melbourne. 12 January 1867. p. 1.
  4. ^ "Hong Kong Government Reports Online" (PDF). The Hongkong Government Gazette. Vol. 3, no. 30. 26 December 1857.
  5. ^ "Hong Kong Government Reports Online" (PDF). The Hongkong Government Gazette. No. 125. 9 November 1861.
  6. ^ "Hong Kong Government Reports Online" (PDF). The Hongkong Government Gazette. No. 147. 10 August 1866.
  7. ^ "Hong Kong Government Reports Online" (PDF). The Hongkong Government Gazette. No. 109. 15 July 1867.
  8. ^ "Hong Kong Government Reports Online" (PDF). The Hongkong Government Gazette. Vol. 4, no. 180. 30 October 1858.
  9. ^ "Hong Kong Government Reports Online" (PDF). The Hongkong Government Gazette. Vol. 4, no. 70. 12 May 1866.
  10. ^ "Hong Kong Government Reports Online" (PDF). The Hongkong Government Gazette. No. 49. 28 April 1867.
  11. ^ "Hong Kong Government Reports Online" (PDF). The Hongkong Government Gazette. 21 December 1867. p. 434.
  12. ^ Wright, Arnold, ed. (1908). Twentieth Century Impressions of Hongkong, Shanghai, and other Treaty Ports of China. p. 153.
  13. ^ "香港大會堂50周年:從小見大 變化難料". Wen Wei Po (in Chinese). 22 June 2012.
  14. ^ Notice in the North China Herald, 16 June 1870, p437
  15. ^ The Chronicle & Directory for China and Japan 1872, entry for Dent; Municipal Council Report and Budget 1874, p4-5
Legislative Council of Hong Kong
New seat Unofficial Member
1857–1861
With: Joseph Jardine, George Lyall (1857–1860)
Alexander Perceval, Angus Fletcher (1860–1861)
Succeeded by
Preceded by Unofficial Member
1866–1867
Served alongside: James Whittall, Hugh Bold Gibb
Succeeded by
Senior Unofficial Member
1866–1867
Succeeded by
Business positions
Preceded by Chairman of the Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation
1866–1867
Succeeded by